Feminista Jones


Feminista Jones is a mental health social worker[1] and feminist writer from New York City, as well as a large contributor to Black Twitter and a prolific blogger about black feminist issues. In 2013, Jones was selected as a United Nations Foundation Fellow for her dynamic social media influence. In 2014, she launched a global anti-street harassment campaign (#YouOKSis) and a National Moment of Silence protesting police brutality (#NMOS14), both of which received international media attention.[2][3] For this work, she was awarded the 2014 Black Weblog Award for Outstanding Online Activism.

Jones describes herself "as a post-modern sex-positive, Black feminist woman, which basically means that I’m multi-faceted, at least in my expression of myself and my embodiment of feminism. I exist in a new era of critical thinking and self-identification. I promote the positive aspects of sex, sexuality, and sexual liberation."[4]

Writing

She has written articles for the Washington Post, Salon, TIME.com, and TheEbony.com.[5][6][7]

Jones has been regularly featured on Huffingpost Live, has appeared on the Dr. Oz Show and the Exhale Show, and her work has been featured on C-SPAN and MSNBC. She has presented at various conferences at universities and, in 2014, she was honored as one of the Top 100 Black Social Influencers by The Root.

References

  1. Hackman, Rose (26 June 2015). "'We Need Co-Conspirators, Not Allies': How White Americans Can Fight Racism". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 April 2016.
  2. Berlatsky, Noah. "Black Women and Street Harassment: 'Even If You Don't Like It, You're Supposed to Appear That You Do". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2016-04-11.
  3. "#YouOKSis? A Small Effort to Thwart #StreetHarassment (with images, tweets) · FeministaJones". Storify. Retrieved 2016-04-11.
  4. "Who is FJ?".
  5. Jones, Feminista (2015-05-14). "Keep Harriet Tubman – and all women – off the $20 bill". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2016-04-02.
  6. "Feminista Jones | TIME". TIME.com. Retrieved 2016-04-02.
  7. "Stories written by Feminista Jones". Salon. Retrieved 2016-04-02.
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